The activity surrounding the recent string of BART protests just got a whole lot messier.

According to an August 11 email from BART spokesman Linton Johnson to Gina DeLorenzo, a member of BART's marketing department, Johnson devised a strategy to plant "loyal riders" at a news conference vocalizing opposition against protesters.

Within the email, Johnson included the following script for participants to read at the news conference:

“My name is __________. I take BART from _______(eg, Hayward) to downtown San Francisco. I depend on BART to get me to my destination safely and on-time. Whatever your message is, it is completely lost on me because you’re putting my life at risk. Furthermore you’re making me late. That’s preventing me from being able to (explain hardship such as pick up my children from child care, which means I have to pay an extra __________, or miss my doctors appointment, which means I will be sick for xxx time or miss my job interview, xxx). We riders demand an immediate end to these illegal acts that make us late and put our lives at risk!”

The email also suggested that DeLorenzo coach participants before the conference, and create press releases for the media, complete with names of participants and a headline that would read: "BART Riders Speak Out Against Illegal Protests Designed To Disrupt Service."

BART followed through with the plan and, at Johnson's suggestion, hired two SUVs to take riders to and from the news conference. However, only one "loyal rider" showed up. He also took his own transportation, leaving BART with $872 bill for unused SUVs.

After the email was publicly revealed on Tuesday, BART Board President Bob Franklin denounced Johnson's plan, calling it inappropriate and unnecessary, according to SFGate. "It was inappropriate for him, or anyone, to provide talking points to passengers," Franklin said. "It wasn't genuine, and there was no need for it. BART doesn't have to do that."